Hi Eric Well, you ca do it many ways as you pointed out, dd is an option, to copy all, as well you must care about partitions order, fs type, in the end 3 files must be correct /etc/fstab /boot/initrd.img /boot/grub/grub.conf the other thing to consider is grub you must install the boot loader in the new drive so what I would do is: plug & mount the new-drive create & format partitions (gparted) copy all to the new partitions chroot to the new-drive / filesystem if nessesary edit fstab run grub-install and if after all, the new drive doesnt boot because boot loader problems, you can boot with a live-cd chroot and fix. I hope I helped. On 7/28/07, Eric <spamsink@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > What is the latest, best way to "mirror" a Linux installation to another > drive (as a backup, or to move the installation to a larger drive)? > > I do it fairly regularly (every 4 to 6 months or so) on my Windows XP > laptop, using PowerQuest Drive Image, and usually upgrade to whatever the > new maximum available size is for laptop drives (currently up to 120 GB, > started at 60), and it always works well. > > Anyone know of the newest versions of things like Drive Image will work > with Linux partitions? > > I more or less know about the older ways to do it, using dd and (something, > don't remember what) to recreate the boot sector on the new drive, but I > have never been able to get that to work very well and anyway, it seems not > to work for moving a Linux installation to a larger drive, only seems to > work when source and destination drives are the same size and geometry. > > I guess I don't mind connecting origin and destination drives to a Windows > box and use some Windows tool like Drive Image, if that is what I really > and truly have to do. > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > -- [Jorge J. Boscán Etura] quando omni flunkus moritatus